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Remembering Jean Jacobs: The Quiet Builder Behind a Holstein Dynasty 

Some people chase banners. Jean Jacobs helped build a family, a farm, and a breeding program strong enough that the banners eventually had no choice but to follow.

Jean Jacobs with the Ferme Jacobs family, surrounded by the cows and cow families that helped make the Jacobs prefix one of the most respected names in Holstein breeding.

With Jean’s passing, the Holstein world loses one of the steady hands behind Ferme Jacobs of Cap-Santé, Quebec, a name that became shorthand for homebred excellence, deep cow families, and the kind of show-ring success that only looks sudden to people who never saw the work behind it. Ferme Jacobs was founded by Léo and Nellie Jacobs after their journey from the Netherlands to Canada in 1951 and their purchase of the farm in 1965; Jean and his wife, Marian Ghielen, carried that legacy forward before the third generation stepped more fully into leadership.

Jean’s role was never just symbolic. He was one of the full-time principal shareholders, responsible for buildings and crops, while Marian handled accounting and helped in the barn. That sounds simple until you understand what it really means. Before a cow ever walks into Madison or Toronto, somebody has to make the farm work. Somebody has to keep the feed coming, the facilities right, the people grounded, and the next generation confident enough to take the lead. That was Jean’s kind of contribution. Quiet. Practical. Essential.

And what a legacy it became.

Under the Jacobs family, Ferme Jacobs developed into one of the world’s most respected Holstein breeding operations, with embryos sold internationally and cattle known for exceptional conformation, production, and lasting influence. The herd earned Holstein Canada Master Breeder recognition three times, including earlier shields in 1988 and 1998 and a third title announced in 2013. In 2016, the Jacobs family received the Robert “Whitey” McKown Master Breeder Award at World Dairy Expo, an honor built around ability, character, endeavor, and sportsmanship.

Those four words fit Jean’s life better than any trophy list could.

Ability, because Ferme Jacobs did not stumble into greatness. The farm built a 95% homebred herd that, by 2016, included an EX-96, three EX-95s, 20 Multiple Excellent cows, 23 Excellent cows, 105 Very Good cows, and 42 Good Plus cows.

Character, because the Jacobs name became known not only for winning, but for how the family handled winning and losing. Carl Saucier once said of the family, “What I love about this family is that they are not only humble winners, they are great losers,” recalling how they celebrated with Kingsway after losing a Premier Breeder banner by the smallest of margins.

Endeavor, because this was never a one-generation story. Jean and Marian raised children who didn’t just inherit a prefix; they inherited a standard. Yan took charge of herd management and feeding, Ysabel focused on calves, show organization, paperwork, and promotion, Kevin built his own herd under the Intense prefix with Stephanie, and Laurie stayed connected to the farm while building her own career. The next generation started young too, with Yan’s daughters and Ysabel’s daughter showing their first calves at the county show years ago.

Sportsmanship, because the Jacobs family never seemed to confuse cattle shows with ego contests. “We always have a party, even if we lose,” Ysabel once said, which may be one of the most honest summaries of the Ferme Jacobs spirit ever put into print.

The achievements are almost hard to stack without making them feel unreal. Ferme Jacobs captured Premier Breeder at World Dairy Expo year after year, won Grand Champion Bred and Owned at World Dairy Expo in both 2014 and 2015, bred the 2015 Intermediate Champion, bred and owned the 2014 Reserve Intermediate Champion, and took Supreme Champion honors in 2013. By 2016, the family had collected 81 All-Canadian nominations, 44 All-American nominations, 16 All-Canadian awards, and 12 All-American awards.

But the real poetry of Jean Jacobs’ career lives in the cows.

Jacobs Goldwyn Britany EX-96-2E became Holstein Canada Cow of the Year in 2017, and her daughter, Jacobs High Octane Babe EX-96-2E-CAN 4*, won the same honor in 2025, giving Ferme Jacobs two Cow of the Year titles from the same maternal line in eight years. That is not luck. That is a family believing in cow families long enough for the rest of the industry to catch up.

Then came those unforgettable moments at The Royal. In 2018, Ferme Jacobs swept Grand Champion and Reserve Grand Champion Holstein with Jacobs Windbrook Aimo EX-95 and Jacobs Lauthority Loana EX-96-2E, the first time since 1969 that a Canadian breeder had won both titles with homebred entries at The Royal. Holstein Canada’s records show Ferme Jacobs as Premier Breeder alongside Royal Grand Champions including RF Goldwyn Hailey, Robrook Goldwyn Cameron, Jacobs Gold Liann, Jacobs Windbrook Aimo, Idee Windbrook Lynzi, and Erbacres Snapple Shakira-ET across multiple years.

Still, if you want to understand Jean’s truest achievement, don’t start with Madison. Don’t start with Toronto. Start at home.

Start with a farm where communication and passion were named as the reasons for success, where decisions weren’t always made together but were always made with the goal of advancing the farm. Start with a family where Ysabel could say, “Our mom and dad have always supported and encouraged us. Hard work always pays off one day and nothing is impossible, if you believe in something you will accomplish it one day”.

That line matters now.

Because Jean Jacobs’ greatest work was not only in the cows he helped raise, the barns he helped maintain, the crops he helped grow, or the prefix he helped make famous. His greatest work was in the people who carry it forward. Yan. Ysabel. Kevin. Laurie. Marian. The grandchildren. The crew. The partners. The breeders around the world with Jacobs genetics in their herds. The young people who saw Ferme Jacobs win with grace and lose with dignity and learned that both matter.

A great breeder leaves better cattle behind.

Jean Jacobs leaves more than that.

He leaves a family that knows how to work. A herd that proves patience still matters. A name that will keep appearing in pedigrees, sale catalogs, show programs, and quiet barn conversations for generations. He leaves proof that the best farms are not built by one dramatic decision, but by thousands of ordinary ones made well, made together, and made before anyone is watching.

The banners will fade. The photographs will age. The great cows will become names in pedigrees.

But the example stays.

Rest in peace, Jean. You helped build something that will not be forgotten.

This tribute is published following Ferme Jacobs’ public announcement.

The Bullvine will update this tribute if the family shares further details.

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